There's quite a UK art gallery that now calls itself Godfrey & Watt. Its original name had a T in front of the watt. As this sounds the same when spoken as a rather impolite euphemism for ladyparts the name always rather amused me.

Much to my amusement the name soon dropped the T.

Oh that would make me howl laughing.

I once stood outside a restaurant called "Gaylords". In London!!

Logged

Knowledge is knowing tomato is a fruit.Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.

There was a chinese takeaway on the Kings Road in Chelsea (London) called Ho Lee Fook.

Lee Ho Fook, on Gerrard St. was made famous by Warren Zevon's Werewolves of London. "Saw a werewolf with a Chinese menu in his hand, walking through the streets of Soho in the rain, he was looking for a place called Lee Ho Fook's, going to get a big dish of beef chow mein."

I was sad about this:I heard about a new Mexican restaurant many years ago and Lucas refused to go there because of the name - Chi-chi. We finally went, he loved it, and they closed the chain a year after our first visit. I think they still do grocery store items, but it's not the same. I always wonder if it was corporate policy errors or the name that made them close.

There is still a video store chain called FLICKS. The one I knew failed (I hope) because it was written in neon capital letters too close together so that the L and I looked like one letter.....................oops.

Of course, Fanny May candies in the US is still doing quite well. I always wonder what our British visitors think about that!

I heard about a new Mexican restaurant many years ago and Lucas refused to go there because of the name - Chi-chi. I always wonder if it was corporate policy errors or the name that made them close.

What?

I always wondered if so many others were put off by the name as my husband was that they didn't get the business they needed, or if there was something internally in the company like embezzlement or infighting that made the restaurant end of the the company fail.